Famous Floridians:
Harriet Beecher Stowe

Harriet Beecher
Stowe, although best known for her novel Uncle Toms Cabin
about the cruelty of slavery, also wrote about Florida. In the late
1800s she describes Florida as, a tumble-down, wild, panicky
kind of lifethis general happy-go-luckiness which (is) Florida.
Her descriptions of picnicking, sailing, and river touring expeditions
and her simple stories of events and people in this tropical winter
summer land became the first promotional writing to interest
northern tourists in Florida.

She was born in 1811 in Connecticut. She was one of eleven children
of a famous preacher. She attended school, which was unusual for
a girl at that time. When she was 12, her principal read her term
paper aloud at her graduation. At the age of 16, Harriet became
a full-time teacher. Her earliest publication was a geography book
for children called a Primary Geography for Children.

In 1852, Uncle
Toms Cabin was published. In this novel, Harriet tried to
show what life was like for slaves who were treated harshly. Harriet
lost a son when he was only months old. She could well imagine how
terrible it would be for a slave mother to lose a child because
the child was sold. In the book, Harriet describes the desperate
flight of Eliza, a slave, as she runs across a frozen river with
her son Harry in her arms to save him from being sold.

The book sold over 10,000 copies in the first week and was the best
seller of its day. It sold 500,000 copies within five years. After
its publication, Stowe became an international celebrity and a very
popular author. She spoke out against slavery in
America and Europe. According to legend, when she met President
Lincoln he said, So youre the little woman who wrote
the book that started this Great War! (Civil War)

During her writing career of 51 years, she published many books
and shorter pieces. She wrote on a wide range of subjects including
homemaking, raising children, and religion. She wrote poems, travel
books, biographical sketches, and childrens books. She did
this while raising seven children and managing a household. She
was fortunate in having the support of her husband, which was unusual
for this time when women were not expected to have a career beyond
the home.

In the 1860s, the Stowes purchased property in Mandarin, Florida,
on the St. Johns River (near Jacksonville). They began to travel
South each winter. The Stowes arrived in Florida nearly twenty years
ahead of Henry Flagler. Harriet, her brother Charles Beecher, and
others felt Florida did not have as many racial divisions as the
rest of the South following the Civil War. They dreamed of making
the state a safe place for freedmen and progressive northerners.
Harriet helped establish schools for African American children in
Florida.

In
1872, Stowe published Palmetto Leaves. The book was a compilation of pieces
she wrote after she and her husband began wintering in Mandarin. It is
a book filled with ink drawings and words about the people and wildlife
of the area. It includes stories like the one about her picnic on Julington
Creek with its bright sun, a blue sky, a fresh, strong breeze upon
the water.

Drawings show palm trees and happy dogs. There are views of the St. Johns
River, like a looking-glass, the sun staring steadfastly down.
There is a drawing of the stately orange tree, thirty feet high
with spreading, graceful top and varnished green leaves that sat
outside her home.

Palmetto Leaves ends with Stowes support of human rights. She comments
that the prosperity of the southern states, must depend, on a large
degree, to the right treatment and education of the Negro population.
The book has been reissued and is available in bookstores.

An article titled Our Florida Plantation by Harriet Beecher
Stowe was printed in the Atlantic Monthly magazine in 1879. To the right
are some excerpts.

At her best, Stowe was an early and effective realist. Her portraits of
local social life and her settings communicate the culture of her time.
She provides us today a picture of the Florida of her time, the 1800s.

Our Florida
Plantation

It was a hazy,
dreamy, sultry February day, such as comes down from the skies of
Florida in the opening of spring. A faint scent of orange blossoms
was in the air, though as yet there seemed to be only white buds
on the trees. The deciduous forests along the banks of the broad
St. Johns were just showing that misty dimness which announces
the opening of young buds. The river lay calm as a mirror, streaked
here and there with broad bands of intenser blue which melted dreamily
into purplish mists in the distance

At last we came to the plantation house, a rambling, one-story cottage,
with a veranda twelve feet wide in front. It was situated in a yard
enclosed by a picket fence, under a tuft of magnificent Spanish
oaks

The plantation, we were told, had been in former days the leading
one in Florida. It included nine thousand acres--there was a touch
of the magnificent in this fact. It had employed five hundred slaves.
It had raised quantities of the long-staple cotton, held to be the
very finest variety of that necessary article; it had raised, beside,
harvests of sugarcane, and in the days before the great frost of
1835 was said to have had a fine productive orange grove, of which
by the bye, not a trace remained.